








The Government’s media release is available at:
and Watershed’s first response at:




When: Wednesday 15th July 9am til at least 10:00am
Watershed, in support of BCBA, need 16 ‘good & true’ people, to hold up placards for a media event.
Where: In Melbourne, near the CBD.
Travel: Hope to car pool from Wonthaggi/meet there as needed
Contact: To volunteer, please phone Chris on 0419556381, or John on 0409425133





Please help us create
Help us explain why the….
The official government line is still that the final contracts with either Veolia/Connex or Degremont/Suez, to build the proposed desalination plant, are not yet signed, and may not be until after August, due to the global financial crisis. The complexity of signing a 30 year contract with a global “water baron” such as Veolia/Connex or Degremont/Suez, could also be contributing to the delay.
Allied politicians and journalists have actually been listening to us, over the past 2 years. We just need them to do more, now, today!
Cut and paste the proformas provided at “letter ideas“, or below, write your own letter, or combine ours with yours…..you don’t need to understand all the issues, just express your outrage!
For up-to-date contact details for State and Federal politicians, go to
http://www.parliament.vic.gov.au/mlas.html
http://www.aph.gov.au/house/members/memlist.pdf
For added inspiration, take another stroll along Williamsons Beach – you may see a seal riding the waves with the surfers, a whale swimming by, a stunning sunset, or all three!




The government is telling us, that we will pay for this desalination plant, that nobody voted for, even when there are so many better options, with much better outcomes.
We should all be outraged, and Watershed encourages you to write letters. This is something that anybody can do, you don’t need to be an expert, or understand all the issues, just express your outrage. Don’t be ashamed to cut and paste bits of other people’s work, this is all we ever get as responses from government!
Here is a list of politicians email addresses to send letters to:
john.brumby@parliament.vic.gov.au, tim.holding@parliament.vic.gov.au, maxine.morand@parliament.vic.gov.au, Senator.wong@aph.gov.au, peter.garrett.mp@aph.gov.au, gavin.jennings@parliament.vic.gov.au, ted.baillieu@parliament.vic.gov.au, kevin.rudd@aph.gov.au, Greg.Hunt.MP@aph.gov.au, peter.ryan@parliament.vic.gov.au, justin.madden@parliament.vic.gov.au, greg.barber@parliament.vic.gov.au, candy.broad@parliament.vic.gov.au, peter.hall@parliament.vic.gov.au, kaye.darveniza@parliament.vic.gov.au, matthew.guy@parliament.vic.gov.au, david.koch@parliament.vic.gov.au, jaala.pulford@parliament.vic.gov.au, gordon.rich-phillips@parliament.vic.gov.au, philip.davis@parliament.vic.gov.au, damian.drum@parliament.vic.gov.au, wendy.lovell@parliament.vic.gov.au, john.lenders@parliament.vic.gov.au, edward.o’donohue@parliament.vic.gov.au, sue.pennicuik@parliament.vic.gov.au, gayle.tierney@parliament.vic.gov.au, peter.kavanagh@parliament.vic.gov.au, brian.tee@parliament.vic.gov.au, Malcolm.Turnbull.MP@aph.gov.au, louise.asher@parliament.vic.gov.au




Dear Sir/Madam,
Bass Coast residents have been accused of nimby-ism in opposing the Victorian Desalination Plant. But the imminent signing of a contract with one of two powerful multinational water companies, Veolia/Connex and Degremont/Suez, makes us ask, on behalf of all Victorians: What if our state is tied to huge budget blow-outs for the next 30 years? Will we pay for desalinated water we don’t need, as in NSW/Queensland ? Is desalinated water sieved through the bodies of dead sea creatures the best option?
To the Victorian Government we say : Don’t sign a secret contract for which future generations will pay through the nose!
Tanks, pay once…..Desal, pay forever!
I look forward to your reply,
Signed:




Dear Premier Brumby and other Parliamentarians,
I write to express my concern about the proposed desalination plant in Wonthaggi, Victoria.
Given the environmental damage and massive greenhouse gas emissions generated from a desalination plant of this magnitude, it is time to rethink water policy for the people of Victoria.
You’re not keen on the idea of drinking recycled water? Well perhaps it is time to consider what you are proposing to drink….
The offspring and feedstock of the sea creatures listed below, and some of the creatures themselves (penguins, salmon trout, crayfish, gulls) are small enough to fit through the grate at the end of the 4-metre wide intake pipe of the proposed Desalination Plant.
Along with 380,000 small marine organisms per second, they would be crushed and sieved through your potential drinking water, then dumped as landfill, at 50 tonnes per day.
Adding to this environmental devastation will be 8000 litres of toxic effluent per second, discharged onto a rock platform, now abundant with marine life, just 1km off the now pristine Williamson’s Beach.
Just a few kilometres around the coast from Williamsons Beach, where the government plans to build the desalination plant, is this……
http://www.parkweb.vic.gov.au/1park_display.cfm?park=75
the magnificent Bunurong Marine and Coastal Park.
Mr Brumby and other members of the Victorian ALP,
Compounding the water crisis is the lack of water flow for the nearly completed North South Pipeline and the continued loss of water from years of logging in Melbourne’s water catchments.
What we want from government is sensible water policy to secure Melbourne’s future water supply.
No pipeline, no desal plant, no logging our water catchments.
Stormwater capture and water tanks, recycling, upgrading aging infrastructure, mandatory water sensitive design, water efficiencies/conservation, are our water future.
I urge the Victorian Government to abandon its poorly devised ‘Water Plan’.
Do not sign contracts for the Victorian Desalination Plant. I look forward to your response to these matters I have raised.
Signed,




Dear Premier Brumby and Colleagues,
It’s raining. It’s pouring!
But Melbourne is snoring.
She went to bed with a French water baron(?)
Poor Melbourne was brainwashed by morning….

With Melbourne’s water capacity below 30% , the time for installing water-saving devices and rolling out the water tanks on an industrial scale is NOW! The time for diverting recycled water from the Eastern Treatment Plant to the La Trobe Valley, or other opotions is ASAP! The time for North-South Pipeline and large-scale Desalination is NEVER!
I urge the Victorian Government to abandon its poorly devised ‘Water Plan’.
Do not sign contracts for the Victorian Desalination Plant!
Trusting in what remains of your good sense and integrity,
Signed




Dear Sir/Madame,
We are gravely concerned that the Victorian State Government is about to commit current and future generations of Victorians to contracts that do not meet their long-term desires or needs in relation to water policy.
A ’silver bullet’ mentality has been seized upon, with two large infrastructure projects being proposed to solve Melbourne’s water woes.
The North-South pipeline should be dropped. It would be a minor part of the solution, given the effects of climate change and drought on available flows, making this a very expensive option for the dollars spent, the volumes sourced and the communities affected.
The other, larger part of the current ‘Water Plan’, is a seawater reverse osmosis (SWRO) desalination plant proposed for the Bass Coast. The funding model chosen is a ‘Public Private Partnership’ (PPP), creating a necessity to profit from water. Veolia (Connex), who have just lost the right to run Melbourne’s rail network, or another French company Degremont/Suez, will lead a consortium to implement and profit from this plant. An internet search reveals that both these companies have questionable corporate, environmental and human rights records. Internationally they have recently lost sizeable chunks of their business as a result of adverse publicity and boycott campaigns. The Victorian Government is about to hand over one third of our water supply to one of these consortia.
Seawater desalination is expensive, provides few long-term jobs, has huge climate implications and creates another effluent outfall to the marine environment. The proposal is of such a scale that there is only one of these SWRO desalination plants in the world that is operating at a larger scale. *
Here lies a major concern. Depending on conditions in the north of the state, between 50 and 60 percent more water will be coming into Melbourne annually from these two options than we have been using. With this level of expensive “new” water in the system, where will be the incentive for sustainable water policy over the coming decades? **
The State has a duty to secure basic necessities like water supply, but it must consider long term social, economic and environmental outcomes. How can a PPP provide an alignment of public and private needs to achieve these outcomes, while profiting from a desalination plant? Will the momentum, desire, and ability, to use water more wisely in Melbourne be lost. Sustainable options exist now at a fraction of the implementation, operation and environmental cost of desalination. Investment in these options could effectively be ruled out for decades if the government signs contracts with Veolia or Degremont/Suez worth billions of dollars. We will lose the chance for low impact, high job yield solutions to our current water stresses.
In the light of having obligated Melbourne water users to build the desalination plant, the State Government has just released and abandoned a business case to make use of recycled water from a promised upgrade to the Eastern Treatment Plant. Some 100 billion litres of Class-A recycled water will be pumped out to sea through the existing effluent pipe at Gunnamatta. Over the next twenty odd years the government has said it will be able to find a use for only at most a further 40 billion of this 100 billion litres. The potential from Melbourne’s storm water, to save massive volumes while delivering large benefits to our urban streams and bays, is now similarly in doubt ***. Large savings that could be made by not using potable water where it is not required and by delivering water efficient devices into all homes and businesses may also be in doubt. What will be the fate of these options when a consortium has designed contracts with its profits in mind? Will they be permitted to provide water in opposition to the consortium’s product?
We the undersigned believe the current Water Plan is fundamentally flawed by bringing huge volumes of “new” water to Melbourne, adding to a sewage and wastewater system that is already under stress. Why is the Government excluding use of the massive volumes of waste and storm-water currently in Melbourne, thus reducing infrastructure stresses, marine and urban stream ecosystem degradation, and achieving water security at a fraction of the overall economic and carbon cost?
If the State Government is already financially obligated to the multinational consortia in some way, there should be no reason why the companies wouldn’t be prepared to be involved in alternative recycling or stormwater capture options instead, preferably in partnership with us, through our Government.
We ask the State Government to urgently rethink the cost-benefits of sourcing water from the north, and of the scale and desirability of the current desalination proposal in light of more environmentally sustainable options that are available right now at less cost.
We ask the Government not to sign contracts with the Veolia or Degremont/Suez consortia that will commit all Victorians to higher water bills, poor environmental outcomes, fewer jobs and the handing over of water infrastructure into private hands for the benefit of overseas investors.
* ** *** see www.watershedvictoria.org.au


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